The freshest of the fresh, made weekly only a few hours away by Westfield Farms. Clean, lactic and creamy, this whole-milk goat cheese is naturally the lightest in the case. Lean, mean, and local? Sold! Read More

Each piece of snowy, lightly aged chevre is hidden beneath a brillant blue blanket of pencillum roquefortii mold. The result is an immediate tang, but no residual blue flavors: simply dense, cakey, tart goat cheese that coats the mouth with a pleasant lactic taste. The Roquefort mold is mixed into the milk along with salt, and left to develop in a cool cave for approximately three weeks. The cheese does not develop blue veining because the paste is not pierced in any way; the mold, of course, can only develop when exposed to oxygen, hence the distinctive exterior.
Read More

Toni Chueca is a pioneer. He started making gorgeous farmstead goat’s cheeses in Catalunya in 1980, in a region devoid of goat’s milk cheese. Since then, the cheese has reached the apex of its deliciousness. These days, it abounds—especially Toni’s Madurat, a friendly, pasteurized log covered in veggie ash. The cheese is dense and smooth, with bright, lemony notes and a mushroomy mellowness. It’s genius crumbled in salads and omelets, or served beside anchovies and olives for an elegant appetizer. Pop open a bottle of lively Cava, or a crisp Pale Ale. Read More

Mellow out why don’t-cha? We’re all for great sheep-y feta with its kicking hooves, but sometimes we go all-goat for a kinder, gentler flavor. Known for their award-winning chevres, Vermont Creamery applies traditional Greek feta-making methods into practice using 100% farm-fresh goats’ milk that results in soft, citrusy cheese. Read More

Every time we carefully pull back the edges of the maple leaves that so delicately contain the bright, woodsy cheese bundles from Oregon’s Rivers Edge Chevre, we feel like we’re unwrapping a gift from the tree nymphs themselves. Read More

A 25 year history and a slow, authentic process make this chevre stand out. First, milk is collected from small, local farms in Vermont. Fermentation is allowed to last a full 24 hours to make it incredibly creamy and another day's draining sets it to perfection.